Earlier this month, Chris Delworth, founder of Revelstoke Paragliding noticed blood on a road just south of Revelstoke. He decided to track it and eventually found an injured adult female moose. One of its hooves had been blown off from getting hit by a vehicle. Delworth called a conservation officer and the police, but when the police arrived there was nothing they could do. The moose was eventually destroyed.

A week later, Kramer, who also works for Revelstoke Paragliding, was driving home near where the adult moose was destroyed.

It was a moose calf. Suddenly it clicked. Kramer said this calf probably belonged to the female adult moose that was destroyed a week prior.

Since the calf was still nursing, Kramer said it was unlikely to survive.

The two calfs spent roughly two weeks without their mother. (Liam Harrap/Revelstoke Review)

So, Kramer decided to bring it home to her acreage. However, easier said than done.

Soon Kramer realized there was another calf, but only managed to grab the one. Kramer said she walked up to one, who was later named Clover and wrapped it in a blanket. The other ran away.

Kramer brought Clover home and called a vet who said to feed it goat milk.

A few phone calls later, the milk arrived and Kramer decided they had to find the other missing calf.

Neighbours and fellow employees at Revelstoke Paraglidingtook to the forest searching. One even downloaded audio of a mother moose calling its calf in the wild and played it on speaker.

Regardless, it couldn’t be found.

The next day, Kramer got a phone call. Someone had found the calf on an island in Montana Slough, which is part of Upper Arrow Lakes.

Volunteers swam to the island and canoes followed. After a combined effort, they managed to wrap the calf safely in a blanket and canoe it off the island.

Eventually the calf was caught using a blanket. (Lee Ann Kramer)

Almost two weeks since their mother died, Clover and Chocolate were reunited.

Kramer managed to find a wildlife sanctuary near Golden that will take the calves until they are able to be reintegrated into the wild.

Kramer said she’s had some people voice concern on whether it was right to save the calves. Since the mother’s death was unnatural, Kramer reasons it was right to intervene.

“If I can help, I’m going to.”

Angelika Langen manages Northern Lights Wildlife Society near Smithers, B.C and the Golden sanctuary is an affiliate. Due to provincial laws, ungulates cannot be transported more than 400 km. These will be the first wild animals for the Golden sanctuary.

Clover and Chocolate are two orphaned moose calves. Roughly two weeks ago, their mother was killed by a vehicle. A community effort later ensued to find and bring the calfs to safety. (Jocelyn Doll/Revelstoke Review)